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 social life


Is "Six Seven" Really Brain Rot?

The New Yorker

Is "Six Seven" Really Brain Rot? The viral phrase is easy to dismiss, but its ubiquity suggests something crucial about human nature. Recently, my wife was texting with a friend who lives in Singapore. The news from the other side of the world turned out to be that kids there had discovered "six seven." On Halloween, our friend reported, a boy with a handmade "six seven" jersey had earned applause as he made his way through her neighborhood--a place that's a long way from Sixty-seventh Street in Philadelphia, which the rapper Skrilla may have been referencing in his song "Doot Doot (6 7)," which came out last December.


What is social life?

#artificialintelligence

Dreams about human lives, attempts to understand what's going on. So what is social life? This time I hadn't asked AI to define it. AI determined itself the question -- and answered its own demand, as part of endless mesmerizing texts, written unsupervisedly. Usually, if an editor receives a contribution to his literary magazine, s/he corrects all typos, stylistic fails, etc., of the human writer to curate a perfect text.


Wasps with no social life may find it harder to recognise others

New Scientist

Paper wasps that live alone don't see as much development of a part of their brain that seems to be important for facial recognition. The discovery shows how vital the social environment can be to brain development, even in biologically simple animals like insects. Northern paper wasps (Polistes fuscatus) usually live in groups of around a dozen, though these sometimes comprise up to 100 individuals. Group members all share umbrella-shaped nests, often built beneath roof hangings. The wasps can live their entire adult lives alone, but they rarely do.

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The social life of Artificial Intelligence in education

#artificialintelligence

Artificial intelligence is becoming a major feature of educational practice and policymaking, but researchers are beginning to raise critical questions about its ethics and effects. Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become the subject of both hype and horror in education. During the 2020 Covid-19 pandemic, AI in education (AIed) attracted serious investor interest, market speculation, and enthusiastic technofuturist predictions. At the same time, algorithms and statistical models were implicated in several major controversies over predictive grading based on historical performance data, raising serious questions about privileging data-driven assessment over teacher judgment. In the new special issue AI in education: Critical perspectives and alternative futures published in Learning, Media and Technology, Rebecca Eynon and I pulled together a collection of cutting edge social scientific analyses of AIed.


You can buy a wearable camera to track your social life

#artificialintelligence

An AI vision company is launching a wearable camera for tracking your relationships. If that sounds creepy… well, it sort of is. And if it sounds useful, it might be that, too. It's a device that seems almost custom-built to tap into our fears about how technology will change relationships. And it almost certainly won't be the last of its kind.


The 'kooky' social life of Capuchin monkeys revealed

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Some white-faced capuchin monkeys stick their fingers deep into the eye sockets of their friends, and others will use an ally's body parts to whack a common enemy. A new study found that older, sociable capuchins are prone to inventing more new types of social behaviors, many of which seem to function as tests of friendship or displays against enemies. However, younger monkeys are more innovative with their behavior in different categories - for example, ways to interact with the physical environment, such a flipping over cow pies to use as see-saws. Some white-faced capuchin monkeys stick their fingers deep into the eye sockets of their friends. A new study found that older, sociable capuchins are prone to inventing more new types of social behaviors, many of which seem to function as tests of friendship or displays against enemies.


The Social Life of Autonomous Cars

IEEE Computer

Until the day comes when all vehicles are fully autonomous, self-driving cars must be more than safe and efficient--they must also understand and interact naturally with human drivers.


Tinder launches controversial 'group sex' feature: Social tool will let you take several people on a date

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Going on a date with someone you have met online can be a daunting experience. While taking a friend with you might seem strange, this is exactly the aim of Tinder's latest feature. Some have pointed out these activities may not be as innocent as they seem, describing it as a'group sex' feature. But Tinder Social says the tool is not designed for this, and simply enables users to create groups, meet new people and plan activities together. After downloading the latest update, Tinder users can now choose to'unlock' Tinder Social to gain access to the feature.